“Our strong point is the presentation of the exhibition,” said Anne, “We are proud of this recognition of the museum’s approach to analysing difficult histories, regardless of any agenda.”
“Slavery is a difficult subject, especially for children, but we have used multimedia like film, music and oral history to make it interactive and approachable. We wanted adults and children to be able to engage with the exhibition together and share the experience.”
Visitors are offered a multi-sensory experience which explores slave trade history and questions why slavery still exists today, using artefacts, film, music, images, video and personal testimonies.
The entire top floor of the Museum has been utilised with six galleries, a film theatre space and video response booth dedicated to telling this tragic human story and the means by which this brutal transportation was brought to an end. Touch screens reveal powerful and emotive films on the themes of racism, identity, wealth, poverty and the Atlantic family.
An introductory gallery explores exactly what slavery is and how it has existed throughout history and still exists today. Visitors are invited to discover what made the transatlantic slave trade so different from all other forms of human bondage.
The following two galleries focus on Africa and the Caribbean, where visitors are immersed in the diversity of Western African culture, discovering how trade with Europe descended into the enslavement of African people. Similarly the Caribbean gallery explores the reality of enslavement in the Americas, and how this was challenged by the courage and endurance of enslaved people.